TY - JOUR
T1 - Individual in Context
T2 - The Role of Impulse Control on the Association between the Home, School, and Neighborhood Developmental Contexts and Adolescent Delinquency
AU - Fine, Adam
AU - Mahler, Alissa
AU - Steinberg, Laurence
AU - Frick, Paul J.
AU - Cauffman, Elizabeth
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to the many individuals responsible for the data collection and preparation. The Crossroads Study is supported by grants from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Authors? Contributions: All authors contributed to development of study ideas, models, and hypotheses. Adam Fine conceived of the study, performed the statistical analysis, and drafted the manuscript; Alissa Mahler aided in the statistical analyses and helped draft the manuscript; Laurence Steinberg, Paul Frick, and Elizabeth Cauffman participated in the study design, offered expert advice on adolescent development, and helped to draft the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Funding Sources: The Crossroads Study is supported by grants from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. We are grateful to the many individuals responsible for the data collection and preparation. Funding: The Crossroads Study is supported by grants from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York.
PY - 2017/7/1
Y1 - 2017/7/1
N2 - Social ecological theories and decades of supporting research suggest that contexts exert a powerful influence on adolescent delinquency. Individual traits, such as impulse control, also pose a developmental disadvantage to adolescents through increasing risk of delinquency. However, such individual differences may also predispose some youth to struggle more in adverse environments, but also to excel in enriched environments. Despite the prominence of impulse control in both developmental and criminological literatures, researchers are only beginning to consider impulse control as an individual characteristic that may affect developmental outcomes in response to environmental input. Using a racially diverse (Latino 46 %; Black 37 %; White 15 %; other race 2 %) sample of 1,216 first-time, male, juvenile offenders from the longitudinal Crossroads Study, this study examined key interactions between baseline impulse control and the home, school, and neighborhood contexts in relation to delinquency within the following 6 months. The results indicated that even after accounting for prior delinquency, youth in more negative home, school, and neighborhood contexts engaged in the same amount of delinquency in the following 6 months regardless of their level of impulse control. However, the effects of positive home, school, and neighborhood contexts on delinquency were stronger for youth with moderate or high impulse control and minimally affected youth with low impulse control. The findings suggest two risk factors for delinquency: low impulse control as a dispositional vulnerability that operates independently of developmental context, and a second that results from a contextual vulnerability.
AB - Social ecological theories and decades of supporting research suggest that contexts exert a powerful influence on adolescent delinquency. Individual traits, such as impulse control, also pose a developmental disadvantage to adolescents through increasing risk of delinquency. However, such individual differences may also predispose some youth to struggle more in adverse environments, but also to excel in enriched environments. Despite the prominence of impulse control in both developmental and criminological literatures, researchers are only beginning to consider impulse control as an individual characteristic that may affect developmental outcomes in response to environmental input. Using a racially diverse (Latino 46 %; Black 37 %; White 15 %; other race 2 %) sample of 1,216 first-time, male, juvenile offenders from the longitudinal Crossroads Study, this study examined key interactions between baseline impulse control and the home, school, and neighborhood contexts in relation to delinquency within the following 6 months. The results indicated that even after accounting for prior delinquency, youth in more negative home, school, and neighborhood contexts engaged in the same amount of delinquency in the following 6 months regardless of their level of impulse control. However, the effects of positive home, school, and neighborhood contexts on delinquency were stronger for youth with moderate or high impulse control and minimally affected youth with low impulse control. The findings suggest two risk factors for delinquency: low impulse control as a dispositional vulnerability that operates independently of developmental context, and a second that results from a contextual vulnerability.
KW - Adolescence
KW - Delinquency
KW - Developmental contexts
KW - Impulsivity
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U2 - 10.1007/s10964-016-0565-4
DO - 10.1007/s10964-016-0565-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 27663574
AN - SCOPUS:84988712411
SN - 0047-2891
VL - 46
SP - 1488
EP - 1502
JO - Journal of youth and adolescence
JF - Journal of youth and adolescence
IS - 7
ER -